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Why Dexters are Small
The smallness of
the Dexter can be due to either of two quite
different factors, one
genetic, the other a
breeding strategy. The first factor is
a gene that in its recessive form results
in a "short-legged" animal. A short-legged Dexter has an obviously short length
of the cannon bone on the front legs between the knee and
The second source of smallness in a Dexter has been the selective breeding for size of those Dexters which do not carry the short-leg gene. This process seems capable of producing just as short an animal as the short-leg gene, and it often produces a Dexter which is more proportionate in character. Below is a Dexter bull that at first glance has the height and body of a short-leg Dexter but it has been verified through DNA testing as NOT carrying the short-leg gene.
One of the reasons why Dexter breeders have pursued a selective breeding strategy is that the genetic source of short-legs has historically posed a problem for Dexters. The carrying of two short-leg genes by a Dexter foetus results in developmental abnormalities, early abortion and death - what has become known as the "bulldog calf". For more, see Dexters and the genetics of leg-length. Experienced breeders easily avoid this by mating short-leg Dexters only with long-leg Dexters. With the identification of the short-leg gene and the development of a DNA test for it in 2002, Dexter breeders now have a certain method for avoiding the mating of two cattle with the short-leg gene. The days of the bulldog calf now belong to history.
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Page Last Edited: 09-Jan-2006